
 Originally Posted by 
newhue
					 
				 
				carves, mine did  the same.  Tried all the fixes below and still the same.  I have been told the caster in the steering geometry is made for driving on the other side of the road, to cater for the roads camber. Not sure if that is correct or just another excuse.
In the end I took it to a truck suspension place that does caster correction.  It's a bit brutal, but they start buy putting the alignment tools on the front wheels, then sling a chain over the diff and start bending the long part of the axel housing.  Did the trick and was only $140.
Drives very well now no pull at all, has done 40k since in all applications, varied weights and road surfaces.  No baring failure, no oil leaks.
Hard to explain, but I see no reason LR cant make two diff housing the same, that cant make much else the same when it come to a Defender.  This is the only reason I can come up with because some have it, others don't.
A mate with a TD5 who had his caster corrected 5 years ago also has had no issues.
			
		 
	 
 
Interesting Jason, I have seen this with camber correction in strut type suspension, but not live axles before 
Perhaps anyone else contemplating this fix, should also consider the less 'brutal' part by slotting the swivel housings, adjusting and then locking. A bit more expensive but a bit less 'twisty'
Still, bending/ twisting is an industry recognised practise, and it works
JC
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
			
				The Isuzu 110. Solid and as dependable as a rock, coming soon with auto box😊
The Range Rover L322 4.4.TTDV8 ....probably won't bother with the remap..😈
			
			
		 
	
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